Bozo
Storage? I am Storage!
I can't even imagine what it would take to do 24x7 streaming to thousands of clients.
Neither can Comcast ;-)
I can't even imagine what it would take to do 24x7 streaming to thousands of clients.
We'll be there to support you in your misery during the hard time you're about to enter.
Appparently I am on the list to be forced into an iPad. :crap:
Clocker and I think Bozo.
There might also be Adcadet, but I'm not sure.
Happy day to all of you who have actually managed to reproduce.
Happy day to all of you who have actually managed to reproduce.
Thanks to everyone for the Fathers Day greetings! :-DAnd Happy Fathers Day to all the other fathers.
Do you have gray hair?
Today I learned that the ASP.NET developer I work with has no idea what ASP.NET actually does or how it works.
Like TW, I've found a lot of developers that only do windows programming with .NET (be it desktop or ASP.NET) to have a lower understanding of the overall architecture and how things work underneath. Even when configuring the servers the application to run on, most of less knowledge on server setup and maintenance than most fresh out of the mill MCSEs (or whatever they are called these days).Today I learned that the ASP.NET developer I work with has no idea what ASP.NET actually does or how it works.
Sorry for the confusion, but it was more a statement of how developers know less about server setup and the whole infrastructure picture than a sysadmin... I would expect a software developer to have a good understanding of the whole ecosystem in which they are developing more than a fresh sysadmin any day... Sadly that does not seem the case... (I've met windows developers that didn't know that 3rd party applications could actually authenticate users against Active Directory, and that they could store user configuration items in AD by extending it's schema).MCSEs aren't developers. They're implementation guys if anything.
With ASP.NET it's very scary... When I did Web Programming at Uni, one assessment piece was developing a database driven ASP.NET web application with signup forms, logins/authentication, dynamic contents, dynamic menus all interacting with MSSQL, and one of the assessment criteria was that you were only allowed 1 line of C# code in the entire setup. The whole thing had to be built using point/drag/drop/click/properties only... So, with ASP.NET you can build an entire database driven website without touching 1 line of C#/VB.NET, all that is needed is the CSS files for design, and VisualStudio and ASP.NET will do the rest... (Note: VS wasn't outputting any C# code via wizards either, it was all using the ASP.NET functions/placeholders).It definitely does feel weird to me that I'm having to actually explain what .NET is and the process model and how all that interacts with a database and everything to someone who has been writing code for decades. Like, exactly how point and drool are these things?
John McAffee has some wisdom to share with all of us. Wisdom that is not particularly safe for work.
From what I read, he literally did retire to a South American life of hookers and blow. He's been living the dream for the last 15 years.
Well, there are precious metals in them. Apparently they have a scrap value of $50-100 or so. It's not that uncommon of a crime in the US.WTF, what value is there in a catalytic converter on the black market?
VIN plates, rego plates, etc I can understand, but a catalytic converter?
With a battery operated Sawzall I bet you could easily cut it out in under a minute from under the car without jacking it up.And how did someone not notice a couple of people doing major work on a car? What about CCTV cameras? Surely there are cameras on the parking lot?